This is an attractive and imposing 3 storey building with ground and first floor veranda style coverings. For many years a Courage pub and was usually present in the early CAMRA Good Beer Guides. Traditional sports oriented front public bar and a separate saloon to the right rear still fitted out with dark wood wall panelling from the Courage era. Bar counter in public bar has 4 handpumps and that in saloon has 4 handpumps too. Food from the Pieminister range is available until 9.15 daily. Outside there is seating on the paved area to the front and a pleasant garden to the rear. Sloped ramps ease access to both bar entrances.
One star - A pub interior of special national historic interest
Listed status: Not listed
This is an imposing early Victorian pub built about 1850 with a public bar on the left and a larger saloon bar on the right, each with its own entrance from the street.
There's a lovely cast-iron balcony running across the first floor which is supported on iron columns forming a sheltered verandah. The public bar on the left is L-shaped and seems an amalgamation of two spaces (see the now-closed double door left of the present entrance).There is a fine Victorian bar-back facing the entrance with vertical, decorated mirror strips at the sides with fine cut-glass panels within the three bays; an old counter now painted blue, and a matchboard dado, now painted ‘gastro-green’.
On the right is a large saloon (so named on a big door-plate) which has a plain skylight and is set partly within the main building and partly within a single-storey block. The glazed brown brick dado running across the entire frontage of the pub ties the two parts together externally but the single-storey extension is certainly later than the original build and may well date from the inter-war period. It is possible that an original saloon bar was extended at that time. The bar counter (apart from the modern extension on the right that accommodates a food service) looks Victorian, but the fielded panelling to half-height on the walls looks inter-war, so perhaps what we have here is a room that is a combination of the two classic pub building periods.
An imposing early Victorian pub built about 1850 (both 1847 and 1858 are claimed as the date). Three-storey of London brick with a glazed brown brick dado on the ground floor. It has a lovely cast-iron balcony running across the first floor which is supported on iron columns forming a sheltered verandah below. The layout has two large public rooms which are entirely separate (very unusual these days) and require you to go outside to get from one to the other. The public bar on the left is L-shaped and seems an amalgamation of two spaces (see the now-closed double door left of the present entrance).There is a fine Victorian bar-back facing the entrance with vertical, decorated mirror strips at the sides and fine cut-glass panels within the three bays: old counter, now painted blue, and a matchboard dado, now painted ‘gastro-green’. What a pity the plaster has been hacked off in two places to expose the rough brickwork behind (would you do that in your own home?!).
On the right is a large saloon (so named on a big door-plate) which is set partly within the main building and partly within a single-storey block. The glazed brick dado running across the entire frontage of the pub ties the two parts together externally but is certainly later than the original build and may well date from the interwar period. Was the main part of the saloon added on at that time? It’s curious that the counter seems Victorian but that the half-height wall panelling (very ordinary work) and a couple of attractive settles seem interwar. Perhaps this side of the pub was very much smaller and the counter is a relic of that.
This Pub serves 2 changing beers and 1 regular beer.
British Oak, Blackheath